Special report: 2008 Olympic
Games
By sportswriter Chang Ailing
BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- "The result is just a result. I am here to
enjoy the competition," Markus Rogan smiled, shunning away questions on his goal
in the Beijing Games. However, the T shirt the Austrian was wearing seemed to
betray his low-pitched tone.
On the back of his yellow T shirt is the word of "Nagano", the Japanese
city which hosted the 1998 Winter Games. On his chest is a picture of a skier
crashing on a mountain slope.
The man in the picture is Hermann Maier, a hero in Austria. The skier
crashed in a downhill in the Nagano Games and was forced out of the race. Three
days later, when many people feared he might have died in the accident, Maier
returned to win the gold medal in the super giant slalom.
To make such a T shirt is an idea from Rogan himself, and he wore it for
the first time when he got his first chance to swim in Beijing's Water Cube,
where all the 32 swimming gold medals will go to their owners in the coming
fortnight sports gala.
Instead of training in the competition pool, where he would soon race
against his long-time rivals Aaron Peirsol and Ryan Lochte of the United States,
Rogan chose to swim in the less attractive warm-up pool.
Rogan said he would like to save the best for the last. "It's like when you
meet a very nice girl, (you have to take things slowly)."
Commenting on his rivals who are believed to have become much competitive
than before, Rogan said "if they want to become a lot stronger, I suggest they
shouldn't waste any energy. Because the race is not for another week yet."
In the 2004 Athens Games, the Austrian swimmer lost to Peirsol in both 100
meter and 200 meter backstroke, settling for two silvers. Peirsol now holds the
100 meter backstroke world record and Lochte holds the 200 meter world record.
Getting faster every year, Rogan is undercutting his own records again and
again. "I am in good form and of course stronger than before," Rogan said.
Starting from January 2007, Rogan left the United States where he had lived
and trained for eight years, and began training in Italy.
Rogan said he likes the Italian way of training. "The Italians train with a
lot of passion, I think there are two approaches of sport. There is scientific
approach and emotional approach. And I prefer the emotional approach. The
Italians don't think much about the scientific aspect. They train with their
hearts."
Having won two silvers, Rogan is the biggest hope of Austria for a medal.
Rogan said that it's more an honor for him being a medal hope. "It's a kind of
confirmation that the training is right and that the country trusts me with that
kind of mission."
Aged 26, Rogan said he would retire after the 2009 World Championships.
"You know it's just swimming. It's fantastic, but there are many places you
cannot reach by swimming. So there are a lot of other things I want to see. And
I want to see what real life is like."
"Being a professional athlete is a free pass to egomania. You can always
say 'I'm first' because you're representing your country. But it's an unfair and
unreal way to live. I want to get to a point where I can't say 'I'm first'
anymore."
With a collection of 20 medals and many European titles, Rogan is already
Austria's most successful swimmer. But, that's not enough. A hero is what he is
fighting for. \